I thought I would take some measurements and provide some data before lifting the NFB as AlNewman suggests.
First, a photo of the red plating in low-light conditions. This is while constantly strumming the guitar - it is not severe, but is certainly visible on V4 (right-hand tube) - see photo 1.
These test results show the voltage readings on pins 3, 4 and 5 of V4 at idle and under guitar signal.
At idle Under signal
Pin 3 447.5 V DC 381 V DC
Pin 4 440.8 V DC 348 V DC
Pin 5 -38.5 V DC - 50 V DC
These results show there is actually significant voltage sag under signal.
Next I used the oscilloscope to take readings on the control grids of V4 and V5. I can provide some number if requested, but the readout was very similar - nearly identical Vp-p, nearly identical amplitude, similar frequencies. No obvious HF oscillation.
Testing the PI anodes, V3 pin 1:
- Freq: 827.91Hz
- Vmax: 260V
- Vmin: 112V
- Vp-p: 152V
- Amp: 144V
- Avg: 206V
V3 pin 6:
- Freq: 1.02KHz
- Vmax: 248V
- Vmin: 132V
- Vp-p: 114V
- Amp: 108V
- Avg: 180V
So I did my best to take readings while strumming the guitar. The numbers I posted here are from a screenshot of a recording of the readout - it seems that the two PI anodes are showing substantially different output (Pin 1 at 152V vs Pin 6 at 114V), and the average DC voltages differed by 26V.
How should these readings be interpreted? The asymmetry between the two sockets is consistent and does not change if the power tubes are switched between the sockets.
The LTP is not perfectly balanced, especially during overdrive, so one of the power tubes gets driven a bit harder than the other. It's normal.
So here Merlin clearly states the long-tailed pair are not balanced anyway, especially during overdrive. So perhaps this difference is expected. I think this explains why the V4 power tube is being driven harder.
I think next I should lift the NFB and evaluate the difference as AlNewman suggests.
Thanks again.